Zhiyi
Zhiyi also called Tiantai Dashi and Zhizhe, was a Chinese Buddhist monk, philosopher, meditation teacher, and exegete. He is considered to be the founder of the Tiantai Buddhist tradition, as well as its fourth patriarch. Śramaṇa Zhiyi is widely regarded as one of the most influential figures in the development of East Asian Buddhist thought and practice. As the first major Chinese Buddhist thinker to construct a comprehensive religious system based primarily on Chinese interpretations, Zhiyi played a crucial role in synthesizing various strands of Mahayana Buddhism into a unique coherent framework. According to David W. Chappell, Zhiyi "has been ranked with Thomas Aquinas and al-Ghazali as one of the great systematizers of religious thought and practice in world history."
Zhiyi relied on the teachings of the Lotus Sutra as the main basis for his system, though he also drew on numerous texts, such as the works of Nagarjuna. One of his central innovations was the Threefold Truth, which unifies the truths of emptiness, and provisional existence, with a holistic third truth: the middle. Zhiyi also developed an influential interpretation of the Lotus Sutra, which he used to interpret all other Mahayana Buddhist teachings. Zhiyi's comprehensive work on Buddhist practice, the , outlines step-by-step instructions for Buddhist meditation and cultivation, combining traditional Indian methods with unique innovations. This text continues to serve as an influential guide for meditators across East Asian Buddhist traditions.
Zhiyi's Tiantai school became one of the most significant Buddhist traditions in imperial China, and its teachings later spread to Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Zhiyi's synthesis of doctrine and practice remains a cornerstone of East Asian Buddhist philosophy. His three great works, the Great Cessation-Contemplation, the Profound Meaning of The Lotus Sutra, and the Words and Phrases of The Lotus Sutra are the foundational treatises for the Tiantai, Tendai and Cheontae traditions. Zhiyi's works also influenced other Buddhist traditions, such as Chan/Zen, Pure Land and Nichiren Buddhism, and continue to be studied by Asian Buddhists for their depth, clarity, and systematic approach to Buddhist thought. His system provides a universalist Mahayana framework which allowed it to easily adapt to new times and cultures.
Biography
Born with the surname Chen in Huarong District, Jing Prefecture, Zhiyi lost his parents and hometown of Jiangling to the Western Wei army when he was just seventeen. He subsequently became a Buddhist monk at eighteen. As a young monk, he studied Mahayana sutras and Vinaya, and also recited the Threefold Lotus Sutra, under the guidance of Vinaya master Huikuang.At 23, Zhiyi met his most important teacher, Nanyue Huisi, a meditation and Lotus Sutra master who would later be listed as Zhiyi's predecessor in the Tiantai lineage. On first meeting, Huisi is said to have greeted Zhiyi as an old friend, since he recognized that they had both been present in the Lotus Sutra assembly at Vulture's Peak. Under Huisi's tutelage, Zhiyi practiced the Lotus Samadhi Repentance, the Pratyutpanna Samadhi, the , the Lotus Sutra based "four practices of ease and bliss", and the meditative recitation of the Lotus Sutra.
In 567, Zhiyi traveled with several followers to Waguansi monastery at the Southern capital of Jinling to give teachings on the Lotus Sutra and the. He spent eight years at the capital teaching. After eight years, feeling that his efforts in the capital were not effective in bringing people to the true Dharma, he moved to Tiantai mountain in 575, where he would remain for eleven years studying and practicing. This move came around the same time as the second great persecution of Buddhism by Emperor Wu was raging in the north. Zhiyi also built a monastery on mountain Tiantai, which was later named Xiuchansi.
In 585 Zhiyi returned to the capital of Jinling as requested by the king of Chen. It is here that he would give a series of lectures on the Lotus Sutra which would later be edited by his disciple into an influential commentary, the . Zhiyi also acted as preceptor of the bodhisattva precepts to the future Emperor Yang of Sui, at the prince's request, who then granted Zhiyi the title of Dashi "Zhizhe". He then founded another monastery in his native Jingzhou which later came to be called .
In the latter part of his life, he gave other lectures which would become his other great works, the and the . He also wrote two commentaries on the Vimalakīrtinirdeśa just before the end of his life in 597.
Guanding's biography of Zhiyi states that as he was dying he made offerings to Maitreya, recited the names of, and, and listened to recitations from the Lotus Sutra and the Contemplation Sutra while waiting for Avalokitesvara to welcome him into the pure land.
Zhiyi is said to have thirty two direct disciples. Guanding was his most influential disciple, since he was responsible for recording and preserving the master's legacy. It was Guanding who edited and published the master's lectures into the Mohe Zhiguan and the two great commentaries on the Lotus Sutra. Guanding also wrote his own original works, including two commentaries on the Nirvana Sutra.
Zhiyi was vastly influential on the development of East Asian Buddhism. His Tiantai school became one of the most important traditions of Buddhist study and practice in the history of China and Japan. Zhiyi's work also influenced the development of other traditions like Chan and Pure Land.
Works
Major works
Zhiyi's major works are known as the "Three Great Works of Tiantai" or "Three Great Texts of the Lotus". These key works were compiled and edited by Zhiyi's disciple Guanding from Zhiyi's lectures and writings. The three texts are:- Words and Phrases of the Wondrous Dharma Lotus Flower, a traditional commentary which discusses each passage of the sutra.
- Profound Meaning of the Wondrous Dharma Lotus Flower, a commentary which discusses the essential meaning of the Lotus Sutra.
- Great Calming-Insight, a large treatise on doctrine and practice, based on lectures given by Zhiyi towards the end of his life, which were edited and arranged by his student Guanding. The title owes its name to the practice of samatha and vipasyana, which Zhiyi uses to cover the entirety of the Buddha Dharma. This work, though seen by tradition as also based on the Lotus Sutra, actually draws on numerous Mahayana texts to explicate the "perfect and sudden" teachings on meditation. It cites sutras like the Avatamsaka Sutra extensively, even more than the Lotus Sutra.
Important practice texts
These are the three Major Tiantai treatises studied in mainland Tiantai and Japanese Tendai and remain the cornerstone of the tradition's doctrine and practice.Zhiyi also wrote three shorter works on meditation practice, explaining different approaches calming and insight practice:
- Explanation of the Sequential Dharma Gates of Dhyāna Pāramitā, which presents his teachings on the "gradual and sequential" approach to calming and insight meditation and was written towards the beginning of Zhiyi's career
- The was probably the first practical manual of meditation in China. With its direct influence on the Tso-chan-i, this smaller meditation treatise was very influential in the development of Chan meditation.
- The Six Wondrous Dharma Gates, presents the "variable" approach to calming and insight.
- Repentance Ritual for the Lotus Sūtra Samādhi
- Vaipulya-samādhi Repentance Practice,
- Repentance Ritual of Petitioning Avalokiteśvara,
- Golden Light Repentance Practice
Other attributed works
- Profound Commentary on the Vimalakīrti Sūtra, an important work which was written by Zhiyi himself
- Concise Commentary on the Vimalakīrti Sūtra
- Treatise on Contemplating the Mind, also called Treatise on the Churning of Milk, an authentic and important late work of Zhiyi
- Commentary on the Vajracchedikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra
- Commentary on the Sūtra for Humane Kings
- Profound Meaning of the Golden Light Sūtra
- Textual Commentary on the Golden Light Sūtra
- Commentary on the Meaning of the Bodhisattva Precepts
- Essentials of Seated Meditation in the Practice of Calming and Contemplation
- The Four Foundations of Mindfulness
- Oral Instructions on Meditation from the Great Master Zhiyi of Tiantai
- Explanation of the Mahāprajñāpāramitā Enlightening-Thought Samādhi
- Gradual Entry into the Dharmadhātu
- The Fourfold Teachings
- Practice Methods for the Samādhi of the Expanded Teachings
- Treatise on Ten Doubts about the Pure Land
- The Five Expedient Gates of Mindfulness of the Buddha
- Profound Meaning of Avalokiteśvara
- Commentary on the Meaning of Avalokiteśvara
- Commentary on the Sūtra of Inviting Avalokiteśvara
- Commentary on the Sūtra on the Visualization of Amitāyus
- Notes on the Meaning of the Amitābha Sūtra